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-   -   Snapper season (http://www.saltycajun.com/forum/showthread.php?t=27686)

Montauk17 02-01-2012 09:37 PM

Made me look it up....http://www.seagrantfish.lsu.edu/faqs...er/biology.htm

As recently as 20 years ago, red snapper from the Gulf of Mexico (GOM) were thought to live only about 10-15 years; we now know them to be significantly long-lived compared to many familiar marine fishes. Spotted seatrout (specks) in Louisiana seldom survive past age 5, tunas are old at age 12, and redfish may live about 40 years at the maximum. The oldest red snapper reported in the scientific literature is an individual sampled in February 1991. This specimen, a female 53.6 years of age at time of capture, was actually hatched before World War II and survived to “see” the dawn of the atomic age, the first man on the moon, and the technological boom of the late 20th century.

bluewing 02-01-2012 11:53 PM

10, 15, 20 years old fish it doesn't matter, they have an over population. You can't drop a line in the gulf and not catch one.

meaux fishing 02-02-2012 12:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bluewing (Post 386117)
10, 15, 20 years old fish it doesn't matter, they have an over population. You can't drop a line in the gulf and not catch one.

that is what I asked him about but he said that although the snapper population is recovering it is not back to where it needs to be to sustain an increase in the limit. Mainly because the a certain percentage of the population needs to be over a certain age to produce enough offspring to sustain the population

bluewing 02-02-2012 01:41 AM

got ya. makes sense

Ratdog 02-02-2012 08:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Montauk17 (Post 385993)
Made me look it up....http://www.seagrantfish.lsu.edu/faqs...er/biology.htm

As recently as 20 years ago, red snapper from the Gulf of Mexico (GOM) were thought to live only about 10-15 years; we now know them to be significantly long-lived compared to many familiar marine fishes. Spotted seatrout (specks) in Louisiana seldom survive past age 5, tunas are old at age 12, and redfish may live about 40 years at the maximum. The oldest red snapper reported in the scientific literature is
an individual sampled in February 1991. This specimen, a female 53.6 years of age at time of capture, was actually hatched before World War II and survived to “see” the dawn of the atomic age, the first man on the moon, and the technological boom of the late 20th century.

Nice.

YellowMouth7 02-02-2012 05:12 PM

Great educational post....Thanks


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